

BA Finnish and Hungarian
About this course
Finnish and Hungarian are two of Europe's most structurally distinctive languages, both belonging to the Finno-Ugric family rather than the Indo-European group that includes most other European tongues. This shared ancestry gives them grammatical and phonological features, such as agglutinative morphology and vowel harmony, that are unlike anything found in German, French or Spanish, making the combination intellectually challenging in the best possible sense. Studying both languages together gives you a rare comparative perspective on language structure, and positions you within a specialist field where expertise is genuinely scarce. At University College London, this four-year full-time programme will develop your proficiency in both Finnish and Hungarian from whatever starting point you bring. You will engage with the literature, history, culture and politics of Finland and Hungary alongside the linguistic work, gaining insight into two societies whose experiences of the twentieth century, from the Winter War to communist-era Hungary, have shaped distinct national identities. UCL's Department of Scandinavian and Eastern European Studies has long-standing expertise in Finno-Ugric languages, and you will benefit from small-group teaching and access to specialist academic resources. The typical entry profile for this programme is around 168 UCAS tariff points, reflecting the high academic standard expected at UCL. Fluency in Finnish and Hungarian opens up opportunities that most language graduates simply cannot access. Career paths include translation and interpreting, particularly in legal, diplomatic and commercial contexts where English-Finnish or English-Hungarian expertise is in short supply. Roles in the civil service and foreign service, with postings in Helsinki or Budapest, are a natural fit, as are positions in international organisations, think tanks and research institutions focused on Central and Northern Europe. Academic careers in linguistics, Finno-Ugric studies or comparative literature are well supported by the research environment at UCL. Graduates also enter journalism, publishing, business development and cultural organisations where specialist language skills add considerable distinction.
Syllabus & Modules
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